Police target people who use Facebook and Twitter behind the wheel

SCOTLAND’S top road safety police chief has pledged to crack down on smart phone users who use Facebook and Twitter behind the wheel.

Chief Superintendent Charlie Common spoke out after new research from the US suggested growing use of iPhones and other smartphones posed a potential road safety menace.

Drivers who cannot resist the temptation to read email, browse social networking sites, or even play games are a growing danger to themselves and others, according to the research.

The Scottish Government yesterday (tues) released road casualty figures for 2009 which suggest Scotland’s roads are the safest they have been for 60 years.But Chief Superintendent Common said “driver distraction” had been identified as of the key “threats to casualty reduction”.

He said: “The use of any distraction device, including Smart Phones, is illegal and carries the same penalties associated with making a call whilst driving.”

He added: “We are committed to stopping those motorists who continue to ignore the safety warnings and risk their life and the lives of others.”

He added: “We would encourage everyone to acknowledge driving as a skill which requires concentration and judgement.”

Andrew Howard, head of road safety at the AA, said drivers using Twitter was emerging as a growing problem.

He said a trawl of Twitter had revealed hundreds of examples of drivers who admitted Tweeting behind the wheel.

Examples of Tweets included: “Driving a taxi”, “I’m driving top down”, “Awake, hung-over and driving”, “Trying to stay awake driving” and “Tweeting past a billboard as I speed”.

The new research from the US says the number of “distracted driving” fatalities there has rocketed by almost 30% in the past five years.

A massive increase in drivers texting while behind the wheel is blamed for much of the carnage.

And the report authors warn that using smart phone applications, or “apps”, while driving is just as dangerous as texting.

Fernando Wilson and Jim Stimpson, writing in the American Journal of Public Health, found that deaths involving distracted drivers dropped between 1999 and 2005 but a “dramatic rise” in texting was a factor in the figure increasing by 28% over the next three years from 4,572 to 5,870.

They observed: “The increase in traffic fatalities…appears to be related to a shift in how handheld devices are used; such devices require more consistent interaction.”

They added: “Smart phones such as the iPhone provide Internet browsing and access to a variety of applications such as games and navigation programs. Many of these applications involve the same inherent hazard as text messaging while driving, because the applications divert a driver’s eyes away from the road.”